Bio Chapter 21 Community Ecology
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Transcript Bio Chapter 21 Community Ecology
Chapter 21
Community Ecology
21.1 Species Interactions
Communities contain populations that
interact in many ways
There are five major types of interactions
(symbioses): predation, parasitism,
competition, mutualism, and
commensalism
Predation
A predator captures,
kills, and consumes
the prey
Predation determines
where and how a
species lives
Regulates population
size
Predators and Natural Selection
Natural selection favors
adaptations that improve
the efficiency of
predators (the better the
hunter, the more food to
survive)
Examples: predator
adaptations such as coat
color, sharp teeth or
claws, able to find prey
(sense of smell, accurate
vision)
Prey and Natural Selection
The survival of prey animals depend on
their ability to avoid being eaten
Examples: camouflage, poison,
behavior, ability to hide, able to outrun
predator
Mimicry
A harmless species
resembles a
poisonous one
The mimic is
protected since it is
avoided
Mullerian Mimicry
When several dangerous/poisonous
species have similar warning coloration
Example: the black and yellow striped
pattern on bees and wasps
Batesian Mimicry
When a harmless species mimics the
warning coloration of a dangerous
species
Example: coral snakes and scarlet king
snakes
Plant-Herbivore Interactions
Plants have evolved adaptations that
protect them from being eaten by
herbivores
examples: thorns, spines, stinging hairs,
tough leaves, chemical defenses
Secondary Compounds
Some chemicals in plants are poisonous,
irritating, or bad-tasting
Many plant chemicals are used for
medicines
There are many medicinal cures in
rainforest plants, but they are being
destroyed due to habitat destruction!
Parasitism
One individual is harmed while the other
benefits
The parasite feeds on the host
Ectoparasites (external)
Endoparasites (internal)
Parasitism and Evolution
Parasitism has caused an evolution of a
variety of host defenses
Natural selection favors adaptations that
allow a parasite to exploit its host (very
specialized bodies and lifestyles)
Competition
The use of the same
limited resource by
two or more species
Competitive
exclusion: one
species can be
eliminated from a
community because
of competition
Competition in Paramecia
G.F. Gause studied competition between
two species of paramecia in the lab
Character Displacement
Competitors may evolve niche
differences or anatomical differences
that lessen the competition
Example: Darwin’s finches
Resource Partitioning
When similar species coexist, each
species uses only part of the available
resources
Example: warblers forage in different
types of trees
Mutualism
A cooperative relationship in which both
species benefit
example: pollination (pollinators are
attracted to a food source and transfer
pollen to other flowers while feeding)
Commensalism
One species benefits while the other is
not affected
Example: cattle egrets feed on insects
that fly out of the grass when the Cape
buffalo is walking
21.2 Properties of Communities
Species richness: the
number of species a
community contains
Species diversity:
relates the number of
species to the
relative abundance
of each species
Patterns of Species Richness
Varies with latitude
The closer to the equator, the more
species (greatest in tropical rainforests)
E.O. Wilson found more ant species in a
single tree in Peru than there are in the
entire British Isles
Tropical Rainforests
Climate is more stable than a temperate
area
Plants can photosynthesize year-round
Tropical rainforests have the highest
biodiversity on Earth
The Species-Area Effect
Larger areas usually
contain more species
than smaller areas
(more habitats)
Most often applied to
islands
Reducing the size of
a habitat reduces the
number of species
Community Stability
Stability refers to a community’s
resistance to change and is directly
related to species richness
The more species, the more interactions
and the better a habitat can withstand a
disturbance
21.3 Succession
A gradual process of change and
replacement of the types of species in a
community
Ecosystems are constantly changing
Primary Succession
Occurs on a surface where no
ecosystem existed before
Example: rocks, volcanic islands, cliffs,
sand dunes
Primary Succession
Happens very slowly
Bare rock lichens moss
grasses shrubs trees
Example: Galapagos Islands
Secondary Succession
Most common type of succession
Occurs on a surface where an
ecosystem previously existed
Occurs after an ecosystem is disturbed
by humans or by storms, floods,
earthquakes, or volcanoes
Secondary Succession
Pioneer species- the first organisms to colonize
any newly available area
Grasses and weeds shrubs shade
intolerant trees shade tolerant trees
climax community
Example: eruption of Mt. St. Helens destroyed
44,460 acres of forest
Old-field Succession
When farmland is abandoned, it will start
to turn back into a forest ecosystem
Pioneer plants such as grasses and
weeds will start to grow
After about 100 years, the field will return
to a climax community
Old-field Succession